We determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the human endogenous retrovirus genome HERV-K1O isolated as the sequence homologous to the Syrian hamster intracisternal A-particle (type A retrovirus) genome. HERV-K1O is 9,179 base pairs long with long terminal repeats of 968 base pairs at both ends; a sequence 290 base pairs long, however, was found to be deleted. It was concluded that a composite genome having the 290-base-pair fragment is the prototype HERV-K provirus gag (666 codons), protease (334 codons), pol (937 codons), and env (618 codons) genes. The size of the protease gene product of HERV-K is essentially the same as that of A-and D-type oncoviruses but nearly twice that of other retroviruses. A comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences encoded by the pol region showed HERV-K to be closely related to types A and D retroviruses and even more so to type B retrovirus. It was noted that the env gene product of HERV-K structurally resembles the mouse mammary tumor virus (type B retrovirus) env protein, and the possible expression of the HERV-K env gene in human breast cancer cells is discussed. Recently, human endogenous retrovirus genomes, some homologous to mammalian type B (2, 3, 8, 42) or type C (1, 18, 21, 22, 28) retroviruses or to retrovirus proviruses of an unidentified type (16), were isolated and characterized. However, the types, structures, and functions of human endogenous retroviruses and their causal relationships to human cancer have yet to be fully clarified. Intracistemal A-particle (IAP; type A retrovirus) genomes are moderately repetitive endogenous retrovirus genomes interspersedly present in rodents such as mice, rats, and Syrian hamsters (15). Our recent determination of the complete nucleotide sequence of a Syrian hamster IAP genome
Expression of the human endogenous retrovirus genome HERV-K, homologous to mouse mammary tumor virus, was investigated in cultured human tumor cells. In several cell lines, the HERV-K genome was expressed as an 8.8-kilobase poly(A)+ RNA which appeared to be a full-size transcript of this genome. In the human breast cancer cell line T47D, stimulation of HERV-K genome expression by progesterone was observed after estradiol treatment.
Cigarette smoking is a risk factor for the development of airway hyperresponsiveness and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Little is known concerning the effect of cigarette smoking on the contractility of airway smooth muscle. The current study was performed to determine the responsiveness of bronchial smooth muscles isolated from rats that were subacutely exposed to mainstream cigarette smoke in vivo. Male Wistar rats were exposed to diluted mainstream cigarette smoke for 2 h/d every day for 2 wk. Twenty-four hours after the last cigarette smoke exposure, a marked airway inflammation (i.e., increases in numbers of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and macrophages in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and peribronchial tissues) was observed. In these subacutely cigarette smoke-exposed animals, the responsiveness of isolated intact (nonpermeabilized) bronchial smooth muscle to acetylcholine, but not to high K+ -depolarization, was significantly augmented when compared with the air-exposed control group. In alpha-toxin-permeabilized bronchial smooth muscle strips, the acetylcholine-induced Ca2+ sensitization of contraction was significantly augmented in rats exposed to cigarette smoke, although the contraction induced by Ca2+ was control level. Immunoblot analyses revealed an increased expression of RhoA protein in the bronchial smooth muscle of rats that were exposed to cigarette smoke. Taken together, these findings suggest that the augmented agonist-induced, RhoA-mediated Ca2+ sensitization may be responsible for the enhanced bronchial smooth muscle contraction induced by cigarette smoking, which has relevance to airway hyperresponsiveness in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
These findings suggest that a delay in normal vascularization leads to abnormal astrocyte behavior, which results in the formation of abnormal astrocyte and endothelial cell networks in the mouse retina. Developmental Dynamics 246:186-200, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
We reported that high-mobility group Box-1 (HMGB1) was involved in excitoneurotoxicity in the retina. HMGB1 is known to activate nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB). However, the role of NF-κB in excitotoxicity is still controversial. Here, we demonstrated that NF-κB activation induced by NMDA led to the retinal neurotoxicity. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were used, and NMDA (200 nmol/eye) and bovine HMGB1 (15 μg/eye) were intravitreally injected. Triptolide (500 pmol/eye), BAY 11-7082 (500 pmol/eye), and IMD-0354 (7.5 nmol/eye), NF-κB inhibitors, were co-injected with NMDA or HMGB1. Retinal sections were obtained seven days after intravitreal injection. Cell loss in the ganglion cell layer was observed in the HMGB1- and the NMDA-treated retina. All of the NF-κB inhibitors used in this study reduced the damage. BAY 11-7082 reduced the expression of phosphorylated NF-κB 12 h after NMDA injection, upregulation of GFAP immunoreactivity induced by NMDA 12 and 48 h after NMDA injection, and the number of TUNEL-positive cells 48 h after NMDA injection. The results suggest that NF-κB activation is one of the mechanisms of the retinal neuronal death that occurs 48 h after NMDA injection or later. Prevention of NF-kB activation is a candidate for the treatment of retinal neurodegeneration associated with excitotoxicity.
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